theYNC

Age Restricted Content

This website contains material intended for adults only.

By entering this site, you certify that:

• You are at least 18 years of age (or the age of majority in your jurisdiction).

• Viewing this content is legal where you reside.

• You understand that this website may contain graphic, disturbing, or otherwise mature material.

• You choose to view such content voluntarily.

CCTV Captures The Moment an Israeli Drone Strikes Palestinian Civilians In Gaza


:) 8-) ;( :D :( :O :P ;) :heart: :ermm: :angel: :angry: :alien: :blink: :blush: :cheerful: :devil: :dizzy: :getlost: :happy: :kissing: :ninja: :pinch: :pouty: :sick: :sideways: :silly: :sleeping: :unsure: :woot: :wassat:
CCTV Captures The Moment an Israeli Drone Strikes Palestinian Civilians In Gaza This video is a premium video uploaded by ync404. Only active members can watch premium videos.

Please log in or sign up for free.
Duration: 0:17 Views: 25K Submitted: 4 months ago Submitted by:
https://mureks.co.id/militer-israel-serang-pengendara-sepeda-motor-di-gaza-tengah-langgar-gencatan-senjata
Categories: Military & War
You are not allowed to add comments
:) 8-) ;( :D :( :O :P ;) :heart: :ermm: :angel: :angry: :alien: :blink: :blush: :cheerful: :devil: :dizzy: :getlost: :happy: :kissing: :ninja: :pinch: :pouty: :sick: :sideways: :silly: :sleeping: :unsure: :woot: :wassat:
1 +1 AlmightyViceLord 1 month ago

i think ive watched this like 12 times and it will never get old. cook those terrorists :devil: BURN BABY BURN.

1 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 1 month ago

@AlmightyViceLord the title said CIVILIANS you bloody moron. CIVILIANS. Not Hamas, though yes, Hamas should die.

14 +1 Kuntakinte 4 months ago

Sionist scum. Hiding behind holocaust and some shit 3000 year old book.

1 +1 Zipliner 4 months ago

This seems like a vanishing magic trick to me.

8 +1 Septimus 4 months ago

Fuck the IDF.

15 +1 Cheralu 4 months ago

YEP NEVER TRUST A ZIONIST

6 +1 Akai 4 months ago

@Cheralu islam literally to this very minute as I write this, endorses massive lying about its jihad and killing innocents to NPC twats like you

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 2 months ago

@Akai Mainstream Islamic doctrine and scholarship generally condemn lying and the killing of innocent people as grave sins. However, the concept of Taqiyya and specific military strategies have been subject to different interpretations by scholars, critics, and extremist groups.

The Quran (5:32) states that killing one innocent person is equivalent to killing all of humanity. Islamic laws of war traditionally prohibit harming non-combatants, including women, children, and the elderly.
Truthfulness is considered a primary virtue in Islam that leads to paradise, while lying is viewed as a sign of hypocrisy and a path to hellfire.

Hundreds of Islamic scholars have signed open letters (such as the Letter to Baghdadi) denouncing the theological views and violent actions of groups like ISIS.
Many modern scholars at institutions like the Yaqeen Institute for Islamic Research argue that labeling all Muslims as liars through the "Taqiyya card" is a tactic used to dismiss the narratives of the vast majority of mainstream Muslims.

1 +1 AlmightyViceLord 1 month ago

@BigHeartSmallWorld thats great and all, but who still to this day is responsible for 9/10 terrorist acts around the world? thats right, muslims. "Scholars" can denounce whatever they want too lmao it does not change the reality of whats going on. Minus that, the book itself is a step by step guide on how to molest women and children and FORCE them into marriges and relationships, if you're familiar with the book so much, i'm sure you support this passage: "that the Prophet (ﷺ) married her when she was six years old and he consummated his marriage when she was nine years old. Hisham said: I have been informed that `Aisha remained with the Prophet (ﷺ) for nine years (i.e. till his death)."

so i'm pretty happy to share with you that literally no one cares that "scholars" have denounced anything, why thats even a question wheter to denounce it is also absolutely hilarious.

lets stop claiming genocide when muslim immigrants literally terrorize every place they enter.

China, the UK, Australia, Europe is all flooded with violent muslims.

I genuinely hope you rot a long with the rest. you are absolutely ALL terrorists.

1 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 1 month ago

@AlmightyViceLord "Joined: 3 days ago" oh sweet, prolly an Alt account. I wonder who THIS could be. Definitely not someone with a pfp showing a bloodied man. Nope.

Firstly, I hate child marriage, actually! And I hate how Muhammad married a little girl, just like how I hate Moses for ordering the killing of all captive boys and non-virgin women, directing the soldiers to keep young girls "for themselves" in Numbers 31:15-18. Or how I hate Elisha for cursing children for mocking his baldness, resulting in two bears mauling 42 of them in 2 Kings 2:23-24. However, apparently while traditional collections like Sahih al-Bukhari state Aisha was nine at the time of consummation, many modern Muslim scholars and commentators have disputed this age. They cite alternative historical evidence suggesting she may have been in her late teens or early twenties.

Marriage in Islam is a consensual arrangement, requiring both parties to have the freedom and capacity to consent. Forced marriage has no legal validity in Islam. No-one can be forced into marriage against their will, and there is no basis in the Shari'ah for this practice.

Al-Qaeda was responsible for 9/11. I hate Al-Qaeda, alongside other Jihadists. The vast majority of Muslims globally reject and oppose jihadist extremists and their acts of terrorism. Polls consistently show overwhelming negative views of groups like ISIS among Muslims in various countries, with many viewing these groups as a threat that perverts their faith. Research from organizations like the Pew Research Center indicates that Muslims from Nigeria to Indonesia overwhelmingly express negative views of ISIS, often citing them as a threat. In several Arab countries, support for jihadist organizations is in the low single digits (2-5%).
Surveys conducted in multiple Arab, African, and predominantly Muslim societies have shown that support for Al-Qaeda and similar jihadi groups is generally in the single digits.

Broad claims that any specific group of immigrants, including Muslims, "terrorize every place they enter" are not supported by empirical data and are often categorized as Islamophobia, which involves the irrational fear or stereotyping of Muslims as a source of terrorism. Security experts note that the threat of terrorism from Muslim immigrants is often exaggerated for political purposes. While some extremist acts have occurred, they are committed by a tiny minority and are frequently generalized to an entire religion.
There is a significant gap between public perception and actual statistics. For example, a 2016 poll found that people in countries like France and the UK vastly overestimated the number of Muslims living in their countries by three to four times.
Many Muslim immigrants actively serve their host countries in roles such as healthcare (NHS), law enforcement, and the armed forces (NOT including terrorist groups).

Studies suggest that a clear sense of belonging and social integration can actually help prevent radicalization. Individuals who feel "culturally homeless" or marginalised are more susceptible to the appeal of extremist groups. Increased anti-Muslim sentiment has led many Muslims to feel at risk of harm. In the UK, for instance, over 70% of Muslims reported an increase in Islamophobia in recent years.

Based on reports from early 2026, there is an increase in extremist threats and, in some regions, a rise in terrorism, but framing this as the entire region being "flooded with violent Muslims" does not reflect the consensus of security reports, which often emphasize the small, radicalized minority and the accompanying surge in anti-Muslim hate. Islamophobia and Jihadism keep feeding each other over and over, and most people don’t apparently recognise that.

"why thats even a question wheter to denounce it is also absolutely hilarious." because if they weren’t you’d say they were defending the disgusting Extremist versions of their faith, which is utterly horrendous and incorrect.

Also do note that Muslims bear the highest death toll from jihadist terrorist attacks worldwide (approximately 80-90%), contributing to widespread antipathy toward these groups.

1 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 1 month ago

@AlmightyViceLord the reason I’m calling it genocide is because 80% of Palestinian casualties in Gaza are CIVILIANS, 29.43% being CHILDREN.
The genocide has been recognised by a United Nations special committee and commission of inquiry, the International Association of Genocide Scholars, multiple human rights groups, state governments, numerous genocide studies and international law scholars, and other experts.

Also, did you seriously think adding CHINA was a valid option. CHINA?!
Like bro it’s literally the OPPOSITE. Since 2014, the government of the People's Republic of China has committed a series of ongoing human rights abuses against Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslim minorities in Xinjiang which has often been characterized as persecution or as genocide. There have been reports of mass arbitrary arrests and detention, torture, mass surveillance, cultural and religious persecution, family separation, forced labor, sexual violence, and violations of reproductive rights.

In 2014, the administration of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) general secretary Xi Jinping launched the Strike Hard Campaign Against Violent Terrorism, which involved surveillance and restrictions in Xinjiang. Beginning in 2017, under Xinjiang Party secretary Chen Quanguo, the government incarcerated over an estimated one million Uyghurs without legal process in internment camps officially described as "vocational education and training centers", in the largest mass internment of an ethnic-religious minority group since World War II. China began to wind down the camps in 2019, and some detainees were transferred to the penal system, while others were transferred to forced labor and factory work programs.
In addition to mass detention, government policies have included suppression of Uyghur religious practices, political indoctrination, forced sterilization, forced contraception, and forced abortion. An estimated 16,000 mosques have been razed or damaged, and hundreds of thousands of children have been forcibly separated from their parents and sent to boarding schools. Chinese government statistics reported that from 2015 to 2018, birth rates in the mostly Uyghur regions of Hotan and Kashgar fell by more than 60%. In the same period, the national birth rate decreased by 9.7%. According to CNN, Chinese authorities acknowledged that birth rates dropped by almost a third in 2018 in Xinjiang, but denied reports of forced sterilization. Birth rates in Xinjiang fell a further 24% in 2019, compared to a nationwide decrease of 4.2%.

Uyghurs are held in what China calls "vocational training centers" but human rights groups label concentration camps, often without charge. Xinjiang is highly securitized with advanced facial recognition, biometric data collection, and strict surveillance. Thousands of mosques have been destroyed or damaged. Traditional Muslim names have been banned, fasting during Ramadan is restricted, and religious practices are denounced as backward. Reports indicate widespread forced labor in cotton and manufacturing industries. Birth rates in predominantly Uyghur regions fell by over 60% between 2015 and 2018, attributed to forced abortions and sterilization. And hundreds of thousands of children have been placed in boarding schools, separating them from their families and culture.

If it were literally any other religion, such as Atheism or Christianity, you’d agree. I know you would. Fuck Hamas and IDF. Both of them are terrorist fuckboys.

1 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 1 month ago

@AlmightyViceLord rant over. Sorry for the walls of text.

1 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 1 month ago

@AlmightyViceLord I just realised you asked who’s responsible for 9/10 TERRORIST INCIDENTS, not who’s responsible for 9/11. However, guess what? That’s wrong too.

Islamic terrorists are not responsible for 9/10 (90%) of terrorist acts worldwide. While Islamist groups are responsible for a large, often dominant, share of terrorism fatalities (estimated near 40%–63% of deaths in recent years) and dominate in the Middle East and Sahel, they do not constitute 90% of all worldwide incidents.

Here’s my key findings regarding terrorism, per Fondapol and Global Terrorism Index:
Islamist terrorist attacks are heavily concentrated, with 86.3% occurring in Muslim countries.
Over 90% of victims of Islamist terrorism are themselves Muslim.
Since roughly 2013, Islamist attacks have become the main driver of global terrorism deaths, but other forms of ideological, separatist, and nationalist terrorism still exist.
Five main groups (Taliban, ISIS, Boko Haram, al-Shabaab, and Al-Qaeda) have been responsible for over 80% of all fatalities from Islamist attacks.
Terrorist acts are also carried out by separatist groups, far-right extremists, and other ideologies, particularly in non-Muslim majority regions.

Therefore, while Islamic extremism is currently a leading cause of global terrorism fatalities, it is not responsible for 90% of all terrorist incidents.

19 +1 lookism_fem 4 months ago

Never trust a Jew

4 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@lookism_fem we can trust Jews, but not Zionists such as Netanyahu. Some Jews support Palestine, and I think they’re good for calling out their state’s genocide upon Gaza and the West Bank in general.

8 +1 Akai 4 months ago

@lookism_fem You're both stupid

3 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Akai yeah probably.

2 +1 Tom_Anderson 4 months ago

Trucker was like fuck it, I ain't missing my deadline for this.

4 +1 VoyeurGentleSir67 4 months ago

Ha ha, they go boom!

44 +1 Galaga 4 months ago

90% of the population of gaza supports hamas, there are very few "civilians" in gaza

4 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Galaga 38-40%, actually. A figure that persists despite significant destruction in the territory, according to recent polling. While support for Hamas is higher in the West Bank, support in Gaza remains significant though lower than the immediate post-October 2023 levels.

Support Levels for Hamas in Gaza
Support Percentage: Some 2026, estimates show around 40% of Gazans still support Hamas, with some reports noting it may be as low as 21% to 38% at different points during 2025.
Approval Rating: Satisfaction with Hamas's role during the war is lower in Gaza (roughly 39%) compared to the West Bank, where it is much higher.
Wartime Leadership: Many residents have criticized Hamas's leadership and strategic choices during the war, even if they do not explicitly condemn the group itself.
Key Trends: While support for Hamas's actions in October 2023 was initially high, it has declined over time among those experiencing the direct consequences of the war in Gaza.
Contextual Factors
No Viable Alternative: Many Gazans do not see a viable alternative, often expressing dissatisfaction with both Hamas and the Palestinian Authority.
Support for Armed Struggle: A significant portion of the population still supports the concept of armed resistance against Israel, which influences approval for Hamas.
Regional Differences: Support for Hamas, and particularly for its leadership, is often stronger in the West Bank than inside the Gaza Strip.
While support for Hamas has declined from its peak immediately following the October 7, 2023, attack, it maintains a core base of support in Gaza, with the majority of the population split between opposition, indifference, and a lack of alternative leadership.

3 +1 Educating_Troglodytes 4 months ago

@Galaga

Child killed in the Qana massacre, in an air strike carried out by the Israeli Air Force (IAF) on a three-story building, during the 2006 Lebanon War. 28 civilians were killed, of which 16 were children.
Israeli massacres, many including child victims, span 70 years – thousands of Palestinian lives snuffed out in the pursuit of a Jewish State.
by Philip Weiss, reposted from Mondoweiss, April 2018
It would be nice to think that, as an Israeli officer once put it, “This time we went too far” — that the killings of 17 unarmed protesters in Gaza by Israeli riflers across a security fence on Friday would cause the world to sanction Israel for its conduct. But if you look over Israel’s history, you find that the massacre has been a ready tool in the Israeli war-chest; and Israelis have not been prosecuted for carrying them out. Indeed, a couple of those responsible later became prime minister!
Here, largely from my own memory, is a rapidly-assembled list of massacres, defined by Webster’s as the killing of a “number of usually helpless or unresisting human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty” (and yes, a couple precede the birth of the state).
1946. Zionist militias blow up the south wing of the King David Hotel, killing 91 people, most of them civilians, in order to protest British rule of Palestine.
1948. Zionist militias kill over 100 civilians in the village of Deir Yassin, which is on the road to Jerusalem. The action helps clear the road for the military advance on Jerusalem and scares thousands of other Palestinians who flee their villages. The name Deir Yassin becomes a rallying cry for Palestinians for decades to come though no one is punished. An officer with responsibility for the massacre, Menachem Begin, became Israeli prime minister 29 years later.
1948. During the expulsion of Palestinians from the central Israeli city of Lydda, more than 100 men are rounded up and held in a mosque and later massacred (according to Reja-e Busailah’s new book and others). The episode terrifies thousands of other Palestinians who seek refuge in the West Bank.
1948. Hundreds of Palestinian civilians are killed by Israeli forces in Al Dawayima village, west of Hebron. Many are killed in barbarous manner; the crime is swept under the rug for decades.
1953. Israeli troops led by Ariel Sharon raid the village of Qibya in the Jordanian-occupied West Bank and kill 69 people, most of them women and children, in retaliation for a cross-border raid that killed three Israelis. (The massacre is memorialized in Nathan Englander’s latest novel as one that solidifies Sharon’s reputation as an officer who will exact swift and awful revenge on those who harm Jews, thereby assuring his rise.)
1956. Israeli forces gun down farmers in Kfar Qasim returning from the fields who are unaware that the village had been placed under a strict curfew by the Israeli government earlier that day. Forty-eight Palestinian citizens of Israel are killed, many women and children.
1956. Israeli forces kill 275 Palestinians in Gaza in the midst of the Suez Crisis. The massacre is documented by Joe Sacco in Footnotes in Gaza.
1967. Israeli forces are said to have killed scores of Egyptian army prisoners in the Sinai during the 1967 War. Some say 100s.
1970. Israel killed 46 Egyptian children and wounded 50 others during an air raid on a primary school in the village of Bahr el-Baqar, Egypt. Known as the Bahr el-Baqar Massacre, the assault completely destroyed the school and was part of the Priha (Blossoms) Operations during the War of Attrition.
1982. The Sabra and Shatilla massacres of Palestinians in Beirut refugee camps are carried out by Lebanese Phalangist militias. But the Israel Defense Forces had control of the area and Ariel Sharon allows the militias to go into the camps. Somewhere between several hundred and 3000 Palestinians are murdered. Sharon, who died in 2014, escaped punishment for war crimes; in fact, he became an Israeli prime minister.
1996. The first Qana massacre takes place when Israeli missiles strike a UN compound in southern Lebanon where many civilians have gathered seeking refuge during clashes between Israel and Hezbollah. Over 100 civilians are killed. “Israel was universally condemned, and the United States intervened to extricate its ally from the quagmire,” Avi Shlaim writes in The Iron Wall.
2006. The second Qana massacre takes place during the Lebanon war when Israeli missiles strike a building in a village outside Qana, killing 36 civilians, including 16 children. The strike is initially defended as a response to the firing of Katyusha rockets at Israel from civilian areas.
2008-2009. During Cast Lead, the Israeli assault on Gaza following exchanges of rocket/missile attacks in months before, more than 1400 Palestinians are killed over 22 days, most of them civilians. Many die as at Qana, when they flee their homes to UN compounds and schools, hoping to be safe. The massacre brings international condemnation, including by the Goldstone Report to the UN Human Rights Council alleging war crimes; but the United States does its utmost under President Obama to defend Israel from all charges, and no one is brought to the bar.
2012.  During eight days of “Pillar of Clouds,” Israel kills 160 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians. The offensive boosts Netanyahu in the polls and seems timed to torpedo Palestine’s historic UN bid for statehood.
2014. Another Israeli onslaught on Gaza, this one lasting 51 days, kills upwards of 2200 Palestinians, most of them civilians. The massacre is famous for sniper killings of unarmed people and for the killings of entire families, 89 according to some authorities, typically wiped out in their homes by a missile strike. In one instance, 20 members of one family are killed. The international condemnation is again toothless.

Philip Weiss is Founder and Co-Editor of Mondoweiss.net.

RELATED READING:
25 years after an Israeli massacred 29 Palestinians, victims are still being punished
Palestinian Refugees Right to Return and Repatriation
Israeli historian thinks 1956 massacre was part of a secret plan to expel Palestinians
Killing Mosquitoes: The Gaza Massacres, Pro-Israel Media Bias, & the Weapon Of ‘Antisemitism’
Today marks the 69th anniversary of the Deir Yassin massacre
Given that history who wouldn't

20 +1 Caniscanyou 4 months ago

ffuck israel their timeis coming so's america

15 +1 Galaga 4 months ago

@Caniscanyou Suck a dick. islam is a death cult

4 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Galaga the accusation that Islam is a "death cult" is primarily applied by critics and politicians to extreme, violent factions (like ISIS) that they argue have distorted the religion, while Muslim believers and scholars generally reject this label, asserting that their faith values life and condemns the murder of innocents.

24 +1 ItsGotElectrolytes 4 months ago

Good. Kill them all

28 +1 iphoneFag-it-They 4 months ago

looks staged to blame israel

5 +1 Educating_Troglodytes 4 months ago

@iphoneFag-it-They
Sure does,


Child killed in the Qana massacre, in an air strike carried out by the Israeli Air Force (IAF) on a three-story building, during the 2006 Lebanon War. 28 civilians were killed, of which 16 were children.
Israeli massacres, many including child victims, span 70 years – thousands of Palestinian lives snuffed out in the pursuit of a Jewish State.
by Philip Weiss, reposted from Mondoweiss, April 2018
It would be nice to think that, as an Israeli officer once put it, “This time we went too far” — that the killings of 17 unarmed protesters in Gaza by Israeli riflers across a security fence on Friday would cause the world to sanction Israel for its conduct. But if you look over Israel’s history, you find that the massacre has been a ready tool in the Israeli war-chest; and Israelis have not been prosecuted for carrying them out. Indeed, a couple of those responsible later became prime minister!
Here, largely from my own memory, is a rapidly-assembled list of massacres, defined by Webster’s as the killing of a “number of usually helpless or unresisting human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty” (and yes, a couple precede the birth of the state).
1946. Zionist militias blow up the south wing of the King David Hotel, killing 91 people, most of them civilians, in order to protest British rule of Palestine.
1948. Zionist militias kill over 100 civilians in the village of Deir Yassin, which is on the road to Jerusalem. The action helps clear the road for the military advance on Jerusalem and scares thousands of other Palestinians who flee their villages. The name Deir Yassin becomes a rallying cry for Palestinians for decades to come though no one is punished. An officer with responsibility for the massacre, Menachem Begin, became Israeli prime minister 29 years later.
1948. During the expulsion of Palestinians from the central Israeli city of Lydda, more than 100 men are rounded up and held in a mosque and later massacred (according to Reja-e Busailah’s new book and others). The episode terrifies thousands of other Palestinians who seek refuge in the West Bank.
1948. Hundreds of Palestinian civilians are killed by Israeli forces in Al Dawayima village, west of Hebron. Many are killed in barbarous manner; the crime is swept under the rug for decades.
1953. Israeli troops led by Ariel Sharon raid the village of Qibya in the Jordanian-occupied West Bank and kill 69 people, most of them women and children, in retaliation for a cross-border raid that killed three Israelis. (The massacre is memorialized in Nathan Englander’s latest novel as one that solidifies Sharon’s reputation as an officer who will exact swift and awful revenge on those who harm Jews, thereby assuring his rise.)
1956. Israeli forces gun down farmers in Kfar Qasim returning from the fields who are unaware that the village had been placed under a strict curfew by the Israeli government earlier that day. Forty-eight Palestinian citizens of Israel are killed, many women and children.
1956. Israeli forces kill 275 Palestinians in Gaza in the midst of the Suez Crisis. The massacre is documented by Joe Sacco in Footnotes in Gaza.
1967. Israeli forces are said to have killed scores of Egyptian army prisoners in the Sinai during the 1967 War. Some say 100s.
1970. Israel killed 46 Egyptian children and wounded 50 others during an air raid on a primary school in the village of Bahr el-Baqar, Egypt. Known as the Bahr el-Baqar Massacre, the assault completely destroyed the school and was part of the Priha (Blossoms) Operations during the War of Attrition.
1982. The Sabra and Shatilla massacres of Palestinians in Beirut refugee camps are carried out by Lebanese Phalangist militias. But the Israel Defense Forces had control of the area and Ariel Sharon allows the militias to go into the camps. Somewhere between several hundred and 3000 Palestinians are murdered. Sharon, who died in 2014, escaped punishment for war crimes; in fact, he became an Israeli prime minister.
1996. The first Qana massacre takes place when Israeli missiles strike a UN compound in southern Lebanon where many civilians have gathered seeking refuge during clashes between Israel and Hezbollah. Over 100 civilians are killed. “Israel was universally condemned, and the United States intervened to extricate its ally from the quagmire,” Avi Shlaim writes in The Iron Wall.
2006. The second Qana massacre takes place during the Lebanon war when Israeli missiles strike a building in a village outside Qana, killing 36 civilians, including 16 children. The strike is initially defended as a response to the firing of Katyusha rockets at Israel from civilian areas.
2008-2009. During Cast Lead, the Israeli assault on Gaza following exchanges of rocket/missile attacks in months before, more than 1400 Palestinians are killed over 22 days, most of them civilians. Many die as at Qana, when they flee their homes to UN compounds and schools, hoping to be safe. The massacre brings international condemnation, including by the Goldstone Report to the UN Human Rights Council alleging war crimes; but the United States does its utmost under President Obama to defend Israel from all charges, and no one is brought to the bar.
2012.  During eight days of “Pillar of Clouds,” Israel kills 160 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians. The offensive boosts Netanyahu in the polls and seems timed to torpedo Palestine’s historic UN bid for statehood.
2014. Another Israeli onslaught on Gaza, this one lasting 51 days, kills upwards of 2200 Palestinians, most of them civilians. The massacre is famous for sniper killings of unarmed people and for the killings of entire families, 89 according to some authorities, typically wiped out in their homes by a missile strike. In one instance, 20 members of one family are killed. The international condemnation is again toothless.

Philip Weiss is Founder and Co-Editor of Mondoweiss.net.

RELATED READING:
25 years after an Israeli massacred 29 Palestinians, victims are still being punished
Palestinian Refugees Right to Return and Repatriation
Israeli historian thinks 1956 massacre was part of a secret plan to expel Palestinians
Killing Mosquitoes: The Gaza Massacres, Pro-Israel Media Bias, & the Weapon Of ‘Antisemitism’
Today marks the 69th anniversary of the Deir Yassin massacre

18 +1 SomeFuckedUpRepugnantShit 4 months ago

Free Palestine from map

8 +1 Richie612 4 months ago

Think the guy on the bike was trying to blow up the fuel tanker.

29 +1 Zaplyy 4 months ago

Classic Israeli shit-cunts, their inbred ass is useless if it doesn't sit behind a screen or in a tank.

7 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

For any dummies who somehow don’t know what’s going on, let Peter (me, even though my name’s not Peter) explain the joke to you! (WARNING: VERY LONG!!! Also, all statements are from Wikipedia):
The Gaza war is an armed conflict in the Gaza Strip and Israel, fought as part of the unresolved Israeli–Palestinian and Gaza–Israel conflicts. The war began on 7 October 2023, when the Palestinian militant group Hamas led a surprise attack on Israel, in which 1,195 Israelis and foreign nationals were killed and 251 were taken hostage. Since the start of the Israeli offensive that followed, over 72,037 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed and more than 171,666 injured. A study in The Lancet estimated that traumatic injury deaths were undercounted and noting a potentially larger death toll when "indirect" deaths are included.

Following its invasion during the October 7 attacks, Israel launched a bombing campaign and later invaded Gaza on 27 October after clearing militants from its territory. Israeli forces launched campaigns, including the Rafah offensive, three battles fought around Khan Yunis, and the siege of North Gaza, culminating in a 2025 offensive in Gaza City; and have assassinated Hamas leaders. The 2023 ceasefire broke down, and a second ceasefire in January 2025 ended with a surprise attack by Israel in March. A third ceasefire came into effect on 10 October after Israel and Hamas agreed to phase one of a US-backed peace plan.

The war has resulted in a humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Israel's tightened blockade cut off basic necessities, causing a severe hunger crisis and imminent to confirmed famine as of October 2025. Around 90% of Gaza's civilian infrastructure has been destroyed and essential services, including water, electricity, and sanitation, have been severely disrupted; large parts are uninhabitable, with most hospitals, religious and cultural landmarks, and educational facilities destroyed. Palestinian journalists, health workers, aid workers and other members of civil society have been detained, tortured, and killed. Israel has detained thousands of Palestinians from Gaza and the West Bank without charge since the start of the war. Nearly all of the strip's 2.3 million Palestinian population have been forcibly displaced. Over 100,000 Israelis were internally displaced at the height of the conflict. The first day, October 7, was the deadliest in Israel's history, and the war is the deadliest for Palestinians in the broader conflict.

A wide consensus of scholarship has concluded that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza (see: as for the Palestine genocide mentioned earlier). The UN Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory concluded that four of the five acts of genocide have been committed in Gaza. A case accusing Israel of genocide is being reviewed by the International Court of Justice. Experts and human rights organisations have also stated that Israel and Hamas have committed other war crimes. Torture and sexual violence have been committed both by Palestinian militant groups and by Israeli forces.

Israel has received extensive military and diplomatic support from the United States. The war has reverberated regionally, with "Axis of Resistance" groups across several Arab countries and Iran clashing with the US and Israel, including the 12-day Iran–Israel war. A year of strikes between Israel and Hezbollah led to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon and ongoing Israeli operations in Syria, and contributed to the fall of the Assad regime. The war continues to have regional and international repercussions, with large protests worldwide as well as a surge of antisemitism and anti-Palestinian racism.

As for the Palestinian Genocide (as mentioned earlier):
The Gaza genocide is the ongoing, intentional, and systematic destruction of the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip carried out by Israel during the Gaza war. It encompasses mass killings, deliberate starvation, infliction of serious bodily and mental harm, and prevention of births. Other acts include blockading, destroying civilian infrastructure, destroying healthcare facilities, killing healthcare workers and aid-seekers, causing mass forced displacement, committing sexual violence, and destroying educational, religious, and cultural sites. The genocide has been recognised by a United Nations special committee and commission of inquiry, the International Association of Genocide Scholars, multiple human rights groups, numerous genocide studies and international law scholars, and other experts.

As of January 2026, at least 71,600 people in Gaza had been killed. The vast majority of the victims were civilians, and around 50% were women and children. Compared to other recent global conflicts, the numbers of known deaths of journalists, humanitarian and health workers, and children are among the highest. Thousands more uncounted bodies are thought to be under the rubble of destroyed buildings. A study in the medical journal The Lancet estimated that traumatic injury deaths were undercounted by June 2024, while noting an even larger potential death toll when "indirect" deaths are included. The number of injured is greater than 171,000. Gaza has the most child amputees per capita in the world; the Gaza war caused more than 21,000 children to be disabled.

An Israeli blockade heavily contributed to starvation and confirmed famine. As of August 2025, projections show about 641,000 people experiencing catastrophic levels and that "the number of people facing emergency levels will likely increase to 1.14 million". Early in the conflict, Israel cut off Gaza's water and electricity, but it later partially restored the water. As of May 2024, 84% of Gaza's health centres have been destroyed or damaged. Israel also destroyed numerous cultural heritage sites, including all 12 of Gaza's universities, and 80% of its schools. Over 1.9 million Palestinians—85% of Gaza's population—were forcibly displaced. Israel's bombing also caused severe environmental devastation across the territory.

This is otherwise known as the Nakba:
The Nakba (Arabic: النَّكْبَة, romanized: an-Nakba, lit. 'the catastrophe') is the ethnic cleansing by Israel of Palestinian Arabs through their violent displacement and dispossession of land, property, and belongings, along with the destruction of their society and the suppression of their culture, identity, political rights, and national aspirations. The term is used to describe the events of the 1948 Palestine war in Mandatory Palestine as well as Israel's ongoing persecution and displacement of Palestinians. As a whole, it covers the fracturing of Palestinian society and the longstanding rejection of the right of return for Palestinian refugees and their descendants.

During the foundational events of the Nakba in 1948, about half of Palestine's predominantly Arab population – around 750,000 people – were expelled from their homes or made to flee through various violent means, at first by Zionist paramilitaries, and after the establishment of the State of Israel, by the IDF. Dozens of massacres targeted Palestinian Arabs, and over 500 Arab-majority towns, villages, and urban neighborhoods were depopulated. Many of the settlements were either completely destroyed or repopulated by Jews and given new Hebrew names. Israel employed biological warfare against Palestinians by poisoning village wells. By the end of the war, Israel controlled 78% of the land area of the former Mandatory Palestine.

The Palestinian national narrative views the Nakba as a collective trauma that defines Palestinians' national identity and political aspirations. The Israeli national narrative views the Nakba as a component of the War of Independence that established Israel's statehood and sovereignty. Israel negates or denies the atrocities it committed, claiming that many of the expelled Palestinians left willingly or that their expulsion was necessary and unavoidable. Nakba denial has been increasingly challenged since the 1970s in Israeli society, particularly by the New Historians, but the official narrative has not changed.

Palestinians observe 15 May as Nakba Day, commemorating the war's events one day after Israel's Independence Day. In 1967, after the Six-Day War, another series of Palestinian exodus occurred; this came to be known as the Naksa (lit. 'Setback'), and also has its own day, 5 June. The Nakba has greatly influenced Palestinian culture and is a foundational symbol of Palestinian national identity, together with the political cartoon character Handala, the Palestinian keffiyeh, and the Palestinian 1948 keys. Many books, songs, and poems have been written about the Nakba.

I’m sorry this is such a long comment, but if you’re gonna type stupid shit, At least know whether it’s true or not!

6 +1 NaziHunter666 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 tl;dr. Sorry for the loss of your vagina. Or congrats on kicking your meth addiction. Whichever. ????‍♂️

5 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@NaziHunter666 I’m not a junkie nor transgender. I was just clearing some stuff up. Thanks for reading tho

4 +1 Akai 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 You left out how 58,000 of those killed were military aged males as fighters, also Nakaba narrative is utter camel shit, because they were actively being insurgents among civilian populations, the invading arab armies told them to move and when they lost, host countries did not take nationals back

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Akai I’m just sticking to what I’ve seen on Wikipedia. That’s on them for leaving it out. However https://www.theguardian.com/world/ng-interactive/2025/aug/21/revealed-israeli-militarys-own-data-indicates-civilian-death-rate-of-83-in-gaza-war (please note that this was in August 2025). Still tho

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Akai I will admit that during the 1948 Nakba (the Palestinian catastrophe/1948 Arab-Israeli War), Palestinian Arab armed irregulars did operate within and around civilian populations, though the extent, nature, and impact of this are heavily debated and central to the conflict's history.
Armed Irregular Activity: Following the UN partition resolution in November 1947, Palestinian Arab irregular bands, along with the Arab Liberation Army, launched attacks against Jewish settlements, cities, and transport routes to oppose the creation of a Jewish state.
Insurgency Characteristics: Because Palestinian forces could not directly match the Haganah (Jewish paramilitary) in conventional warfare, they utilized guerilla tactics, which included operating from villages and urban areas.
Civilians and Combatants: In some instances, the distinction between combatants and civilians was blurred, particularly during urban battles like in Haifa. Arab fighters sometimes operated from civilian areas.
Civilian Impact and Displacement: While fighting occurred, the vast majority of the Palestinian population (approx. 700,000–750,000) fled or were expelled due to Zionist military attacks, fear, and direct expulsion policies by Jewish forces, rather than solely because they were acting as active combatants.
Nature of the War: Many historians, particularly "New Historians," describe the events as a process of ethnic cleansing rather than simply a byproduct of an insurgent-civilian nexus, where hundreds of villages were destroyed regardless of whether they put up armed resistance.
The 1948 war resulted in the displacement of over 80% of the Palestinian population from the territory that became Israel. However, note that Nakba is officially classified as a Genocidal ethnic cleansing by Israel in its Wikipedia article

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Akai also, I don’t think that claim that “58,000 of the 71,600 are militants" is true. In truth, I think it may be the opposite. According to Wikipedia article "Casualties of the Gaza War", ~57,636/~80% of the 72,045 fatalities in the Israeli Invasion of Gaza were civilians, 21,283/29.54% being children.

22 +1 ipi**onliberals 4 months ago

No such things as palestinian civilians since they were all dancing and supporting Hamas on october 7th :ermm::ermm:

6 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@ipi**onliberals sister I’m pretty sure the only ones supporting Hamas in the October 7th attack were Hamas. NORMAL Palestinians probably had zilch idea.

6 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 also, if you could please show me a video of Palestinian civilians celebrating Hamas in the Oct 7 attacks, I’d be more than happy to see.

2 +1 Educating_Troglodytes 4 months ago

@ipi**onliberals
Who wouldn't support anyone that fights those animals?

A little history, and its not complete ;0))


Child killed in the Qana massacre, in an air strike carried out by the Israeli Air Force (IAF) on a three-story building, during the 2006 Lebanon War. 28 civilians were killed, of which 16 were children.
Israeli massacres, many including child victims, span 70 years – thousands of Palestinian lives snuffed out in the pursuit of a Jewish State.
by Philip Weiss, reposted from Mondoweiss, April 2018
It would be nice to think that, as an Israeli officer once put it, “This time we went too far” — that the killings of 17 unarmed protesters in Gaza by Israeli riflers across a security fence on Friday would cause the world to sanction Israel for its conduct. But if you look over Israel’s history, you find that the massacre has been a ready tool in the Israeli war-chest; and Israelis have not been prosecuted for carrying them out. Indeed, a couple of those responsible later became prime minister!
Here, largely from my own memory, is a rapidly-assembled list of massacres, defined by Webster’s as the killing of a “number of usually helpless or unresisting human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty” (and yes, a couple precede the birth of the state).
1946. Zionist militias blow up the south wing of the King David Hotel, killing 91 people, most of them civilians, in order to protest British rule of Palestine.
1948. Zionist militias kill over 100 civilians in the village of Deir Yassin, which is on the road to Jerusalem. The action helps clear the road for the military advance on Jerusalem and scares thousands of other Palestinians who flee their villages. The name Deir Yassin becomes a rallying cry for Palestinians for decades to come though no one is punished. An officer with responsibility for the massacre, Menachem Begin, became Israeli prime minister 29 years later.
1948. During the expulsion of Palestinians from the central Israeli city of Lydda, more than 100 men are rounded up and held in a mosque and later massacred (according to Reja-e Busailah’s new book and others). The episode terrifies thousands of other Palestinians who seek refuge in the West Bank.
1948. Hundreds of Palestinian civilians are killed by Israeli forces in Al Dawayima village, west of Hebron. Many are killed in barbarous manner; the crime is swept under the rug for decades.
1953. Israeli troops led by Ariel Sharon raid the village of Qibya in the Jordanian-occupied West Bank and kill 69 people, most of them women and children, in retaliation for a cross-border raid that killed three Israelis. (The massacre is memorialized in Nathan Englander’s latest novel as one that solidifies Sharon’s reputation as an officer who will exact swift and awful revenge on those who harm Jews, thereby assuring his rise.)
1956. Israeli forces gun down farmers in Kfar Qasim returning from the fields who are unaware that the village had been placed under a strict curfew by the Israeli government earlier that day. Forty-eight Palestinian citizens of Israel are killed, many women and children.
1956. Israeli forces kill 275 Palestinians in Gaza in the midst of the Suez Crisis. The massacre is documented by Joe Sacco in Footnotes in Gaza.
1967. Israeli forces are said to have killed scores of Egyptian army prisoners in the Sinai during the 1967 War. Some say 100s.
1970. Israel killed 46 Egyptian children and wounded 50 others during an air raid on a primary school in the village of Bahr el-Baqar, Egypt. Known as the Bahr el-Baqar Massacre, the assault completely destroyed the school and was part of the Priha (Blossoms) Operations during the War of Attrition.
1982. The Sabra and Shatilla massacres of Palestinians in Beirut refugee camps are carried out by Lebanese Phalangist militias. But the Israel Defense Forces had control of the area and Ariel Sharon allows the militias to go into the camps. Somewhere between several hundred and 3000 Palestinians are murdered. Sharon, who died in 2014, escaped punishment for war crimes; in fact, he became an Israeli prime minister.
1996. The first Qana massacre takes place when Israeli missiles strike a UN compound in southern Lebanon where many civilians have gathered seeking refuge during clashes between Israel and Hezbollah. Over 100 civilians are killed. “Israel was universally condemned, and the United States intervened to extricate its ally from the quagmire,” Avi Shlaim writes in The Iron Wall.
2006. The second Qana massacre takes place during the Lebanon war when Israeli missiles strike a building in a village outside Qana, killing 36 civilians, including 16 children. The strike is initially defended as a response to the firing of Katyusha rockets at Israel from civilian areas.
2008-2009. During Cast Lead, the Israeli assault on Gaza following exchanges of rocket/missile attacks in months before, more than 1400 Palestinians are killed over 22 days, most of them civilians. Many die as at Qana, when they flee their homes to UN compounds and schools, hoping to be safe. The massacre brings international condemnation, including by the Goldstone Report to the UN Human Rights Council alleging war crimes; but the United States does its utmost under President Obama to defend Israel from all charges, and no one is brought to the bar.
2012.  During eight days of “Pillar of Clouds,” Israel kills 160 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians. The offensive boosts Netanyahu in the polls and seems timed to torpedo Palestine’s historic UN bid for statehood.
2014. Another Israeli onslaught on Gaza, this one lasting 51 days, kills upwards of 2200 Palestinians, most of them civilians. The massacre is famous for sniper killings of unarmed people and for the killings of entire families, 89 according to some authorities, typically wiped out in their homes by a missile strike. In one instance, 20 members of one family are killed. The international condemnation is again toothless.

Philip Weiss is Founder and Co-Editor of Mondoweiss.net.

RELATED READING:
25 years after an Israeli massacred 29 Palestinians, victims are still being punished
Palestinian Refugees Right to Return and Repatriation
Israeli historian thinks 1956 massacre was part of a secret plan to expel Palestinians
Killing Mosquitoes: The Gaza Massacres, Pro-Israel Media Bias, & the Weapon Of ‘Antisemitism’
Today marks the 69th anniversary of the Deir Yassin massacre

10 +1 TheThing87 4 months ago

I stopped like every millisecond, and i could not see any drone or missile. So i guess the explosion either came from the biker or the guy with the bags. Also this is so typical for the goatckers, people die because they use faulty equipment, but ofc it must be Israels fault.

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@TheThing87 well yeah, sorta
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaza_genocide

3 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 admittedly it could be bc of a faulty battery in something, but still, (most of this is from Wikipedia!) Israel is at fault for the horrors in Gaza and the West Bank at this moment, for there’s been an ongoing, intentional, and systematic destruction of the Palestinian people in the Gaza Strip carried out by Israel during the Gaza war. It encompasses mass killings, deliberate starvation, infliction of serious bodily and mental harm, and prevention of births. Other acts include blockading, destroying civilian infrastructure, destroying healthcare facilities, killing healthcare workers and aid-seekers, causing mass forced displacement, committing sexual violence, and destroying educational, religious, and cultural sites. The genocide has been recognised by a United Nations special committee and commission of inquiry, the International Association of Genocide Scholars, multiple human rights groups, numerous genocide studies and international law scholars, and other experts.

3 +1 TheThing87 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 Do you think we would all still be alive if Muslims ruled this world? Dont you see how they treat Nonmuslims in the islamic world? Why should i feel sorry about a genocide, carried out on people, which would genocide me and my entire civilization, if they could? Even if everything you say is true, i dont fcking care, because if they had their way, my family, my nation, my culture, everthing i know would be annihilated.

5 +1 NevadaTAN 4 months ago

Average Day in gaza

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@NevadaTAN yeah pretty much. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaza_genocide

8 +1 MinLillaKanin 4 months ago

They are all criminals.

3 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@MinLillaKanin yes, the IDF is criminal for still killing Palestinians after 2 years, even though I personally think 82,258+ is more than enough dead

2 +1 Akai 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 I think you fell for an IED mishap clickbaited as a drone strike that never took place

Its natural for anyone who classifies mostly fighters killed in a warzone as "genocide"

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Akai the UN special committee recognises this as genocide. Also, Wikipedia states in article “Casualties of the Gaza war” that ~80% of the casualties in the Israeli invasion of Gaza were civilians, 28.27% being children. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Gaza_war

By 25 October 2023, when over 1000 children had been killed, Qatar's Foreign Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani criticized the international community for "acting as if the lives of Palestinian children do not count". In a statement, UNICEF regional director Adele Khodr stated Gaza's child death toll was a "growing stain on our collective conscience". On 28 October 2023, the number of families who had been killed entirely had risen to 825. On 30 October 2023, Save the Children reported more children had died in three weeks in Gaza than in the entire sum of conflicts around the world in the past four years. UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini briefed the UN Security Council, sharing Save the Children's analysis. By the end of October 2023 over 3000 children had been killed. The death of Hind Rajab drew significant media coverage following the release of her emergency call and her subsequent disappearance for 12 days.
On 29 February 2024, Gaza's Ministry of Health reported that 44% (i.e. over 13,000) of the fatalities were children. This disproportionate amount is mainly a result of the strip's very young population, of which 40% are below 14 years of age.

Additionally, on 8 May 2024, the UN officially revised previous numbers regarding the breakdown of casualties following more formal investigations, the total number killed remaining the same. Only considering identifiable casualties, the proportion of children killed in Gaza was reported as 31.6% or 7797 identified children casualties out of 24,686 identified bodies. A joint report by Oxfam and Action on Armed Violence in October 2024 found the Israeli military had killed more women and children in Gaza than in any other conflict around the world in the past two decades.

At least TheThing87 was honest with me that he just didn’t fucking care, whereas you try everything in the damn book to deny, and deny, and deny.

0 +1 Akai 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 lol you still havent effectively addressed my point, you try to act impartial saying "but i'm just saying what" but your taqiyya islame simping shows through so bad, ask yourself this, what is the equivalency here? Why is it people both in Israel, western nations as well get chosen for being non muslims and sneak attacked stabbed, or run over, or shot?

When have you ever seen a non military Israeli storm a bus full of unarmed elderly folk and shoot them from a few feet away while shouting religious slogans?
What possible point could be made by beheading a Swiss woman in front of her kids, an old man in London out for his morning walk, or an elderly couple in Israel?
There's no demonstration of what its like nor does it have any kind of logic in terms of saying stop or this will happen
So why are muslim attackers continually striking Jews, non Jews for so-calleed palestine at different points at random over the globe with edged weapons, vehicles etc?

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Akai I condemn all of those attacks by Jihadists. The people and extremist groups (such as ISIS) that committed those attacks are absolutely disgusting, and I hope they get what’s coming to them WITHOUT CIVILIANS BEING TARGETED AS WELL, but I don’t hate all Muslims. I hate the KKK (they’re Protestant somehow) for shit such as the 16th Street Church Bombing and the Murders of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner, yet I don’t hate all Christians. I don’t hate all Jews, despite stuff such as the Cave of the Patriarchs Massacre by Baruch Goldstein, or the Duma arson attack, or because of the Irgun (see “quite a few attacks”). I understand that there’s a disproportionate amount of Jewish terrorism vs Islamist terrorism, yet I only hate the terrorist groups on both sides. This is because I can tell the difference between normal practitioners and extremist groups.

Additionally, there are quite a few attacks committed against Palestinians EVEN BEFORE 1948. These include “Black Sunday” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sunday_(1937) , King David Hotel Bombing https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_David_Hotel_bombing, 1946 British Embassy Bombing https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1946_British_Embassy_bombing, The Sergeants Affair https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sergeants_affair, and the Irgun bombing of police headquarters in Haifa, which pretty much innovated the Barrel Bombs which were used extensively during the 1948 Palestine War. There’s also the Balad al-Shaykh Massacre https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balad_al-Shaykh_massacre , the Deir Yassin Massacre https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deir_Yassin_massacre
However, I’m not afraid to admit that Palestine isn’t without its faults either (such as the Haifa Oil Refinery Massacre).

You can find more here btw https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Irgun_attacks

Here are some other incidents I feel are of note:
18 Arabs killed (9 men, 6 women and 3 children), 24 injured by a bomb that was thrown into a crowded Arab market place in Haifa. (June 19th, 1938)
18 Arabs and 5 Jews were killed by two simultaneous bombs in the Arab melon market in Haifa. More than 60 people were wounded. The toll over two days of riots and reprisals was 33 dead, 111 wounded. (July 6th, 1938)
33 Arabs were killed in multiple attacks, incl. 24 by bomb in Arab market in Suk Quarter of Haifa and 4 by bomb in Arab vegetable market in Jerusalem. (February 27th, 1939)
18 people were injured, including 13 Arabs and three British police, by mines detonated at the Rex cinema in Jerusalem. (May 29th, 1939)
7 Arabs killed (including two women and two children, 3 and 4 years old) and 7 others seriously wounded (two women and girl of 4 among them) in attack on Yehudiya. 24 Irgun men attacked the village, approaching from Petah Tikva shooting guns, dynamiting houses and throwing grenades. An armored British police car was also fired on.

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 also, in regards to your “point”. Jihadist groups target Israel and Western nations due to ideological, religious, and geopolitical motives, viewing them as enemies in a cosmic, existential struggle. Attacks on Israel focus on anti-Zionism and the liberation of land, while Western nations are targeted for their secularism, foreign policy, and perceived "crusader" influence.
Key reasons for these attacks include:
Ideological Warfare: Extremist groups often view non-Muslims and secular societies as "pagan" or "unbelievers," justifying violence as a means to fight a holy war.
Antisemitism: Anti-Jewish sentiment is a core component of both Islamist and extremist ideologies, fueling violence in Europe and against Israel.
Geopolitical Conflict: In the Middle East, specifically in Israel, violence is framed as "heroic resistance" against occupation, aiming to destroy the state of Israel.
"Crusader" Narrative: Western nations are often portrayed as part of a Jewish-Christian conspiracy, leading to attacks aimed at damaging their influence.
Political Legitimacy: These groups often seek to establish a form of "dhimmitude," where non-believers are either converted, forced to submit, or killed.
These attacks are often executed without warning, relying on surprise to maximize casualties and create terror.
Again, these are EXTREMISTS. They don’t represent Muslims as a whole, just like how the IDF’s terror upon Gaza doesn’t represent Jews as a whole.

2 +1 Avabot333 4 months ago

BS

2 +1 Educating_Troglodytes 4 months ago

@Avabot333


Child killed in the Qana massacre, in an air strike carried out by the Israeli Air Force (IAF) on a three-story building, during the 2006 Lebanon War. 28 civilians were killed, of which 16 were children.
Israeli massacres, many including child victims, span 70 years – thousands of Palestinian lives snuffed out in the pursuit of a Jewish State.
by Philip Weiss, reposted from Mondoweiss, April 2018
It would be nice to think that, as an Israeli officer once put it, “This time we went too far” — that the killings of 17 unarmed protesters in Gaza by Israeli riflers across a security fence on Friday would cause the world to sanction Israel for its conduct. But if you look over Israel’s history, you find that the massacre has been a ready tool in the Israeli war-chest; and Israelis have not been prosecuted for carrying them out. Indeed, a couple of those responsible later became prime minister!
Here, largely from my own memory, is a rapidly-assembled list of massacres, defined by Webster’s as the killing of a “number of usually helpless or unresisting human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty” (and yes, a couple precede the birth of the state).
1946. Zionist militias blow up the south wing of the King David Hotel, killing 91 people, most of them civilians, in order to protest British rule of Palestine.
1948. Zionist militias kill over 100 civilians in the village of Deir Yassin, which is on the road to Jerusalem. The action helps clear the road for the military advance on Jerusalem and scares thousands of other Palestinians who flee their villages. The name Deir Yassin becomes a rallying cry for Palestinians for decades to come though no one is punished. An officer with responsibility for the massacre, Menachem Begin, became Israeli prime minister 29 years later.
1948. During the expulsion of Palestinians from the central Israeli city of Lydda, more than 100 men are rounded up and held in a mosque and later massacred (according to Reja-e Busailah’s new book and others). The episode terrifies thousands of other Palestinians who seek refuge in the West Bank.
1948. Hundreds of Palestinian civilians are killed by Israeli forces in Al Dawayima village, west of Hebron. Many are killed in barbarous manner; the crime is swept under the rug for decades.
1953. Israeli troops led by Ariel Sharon raid the village of Qibya in the Jordanian-occupied West Bank and kill 69 people, most of them women and children, in retaliation for a cross-border raid that killed three Israelis. (The massacre is memorialized in Nathan Englander’s latest novel as one that solidifies Sharon’s reputation as an officer who will exact swift and awful revenge on those who harm Jews, thereby assuring his rise.)
1956. Israeli forces gun down farmers in Kfar Qasim returning from the fields who are unaware that the village had been placed under a strict curfew by the Israeli government earlier that day. Forty-eight Palestinian citizens of Israel are killed, many women and children.
1956. Israeli forces kill 275 Palestinians in Gaza in the midst of the Suez Crisis. The massacre is documented by Joe Sacco in Footnotes in Gaza.
1967. Israeli forces are said to have killed scores of Egyptian army prisoners in the Sinai during the 1967 War. Some say 100s.
1970. Israel killed 46 Egyptian children and wounded 50 others during an air raid on a primary school in the village of Bahr el-Baqar, Egypt. Known as the Bahr el-Baqar Massacre, the assault completely destroyed the school and was part of the Priha (Blossoms) Operations during the War of Attrition.
1982. The Sabra and Shatilla massacres of Palestinians in Beirut refugee camps are carried out by Lebanese Phalangist militias. But the Israel Defense Forces had control of the area and Ariel Sharon allows the militias to go into the camps. Somewhere between several hundred and 3000 Palestinians are murdered. Sharon, who died in 2014, escaped punishment for war crimes; in fact, he became an Israeli prime minister.
1996. The first Qana massacre takes place when Israeli missiles strike a UN compound in southern Lebanon where many civilians have gathered seeking refuge during clashes between Israel and Hezbollah. Over 100 civilians are killed. “Israel was universally condemned, and the United States intervened to extricate its ally from the quagmire,” Avi Shlaim writes in The Iron Wall.
2006. The second Qana massacre takes place during the Lebanon war when Israeli missiles strike a building in a village outside Qana, killing 36 civilians, including 16 children. The strike is initially defended as a response to the firing of Katyusha rockets at Israel from civilian areas.
2008-2009. During Cast Lead, the Israeli assault on Gaza following exchanges of rocket/missile attacks in months before, more than 1400 Palestinians are killed over 22 days, most of them civilians. Many die as at Qana, when they flee their homes to UN compounds and schools, hoping to be safe. The massacre brings international condemnation, including by the Goldstone Report to the UN Human Rights Council alleging war crimes; but the United States does its utmost under President Obama to defend Israel from all charges, and no one is brought to the bar.
2012.  During eight days of “Pillar of Clouds,” Israel kills 160 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians. The offensive boosts Netanyahu in the polls and seems timed to torpedo Palestine’s historic UN bid for statehood.
2014. Another Israeli onslaught on Gaza, this one lasting 51 days, kills upwards of 2200 Palestinians, most of them civilians. The massacre is famous for sniper killings of unarmed people and for the killings of entire families, 89 according to some authorities, typically wiped out in their homes by a missile strike. In one instance, 20 members of one family are killed. The international condemnation is again toothless.

Philip Weiss is Founder and Co-Editor of Mondoweiss.net.

RELATED READING:
25 years after an Israeli massacred 29 Palestinians, victims are still being punished
Palestinian Refugees Right to Return and Repatriation
Israeli historian thinks 1956 massacre was part of a secret plan to expel Palestinians
Killing Mosquitoes: The Gaza Massacres, Pro-Israel Media Bias, & the Weapon Of ‘Antisemitism’
Today marks the 69th anniversary of the Deir Yassin massacre

18 +1 penzman 4 months ago

Civilians? Hamas and the other rats do not wear military uniforms so they can blend in with the civilians. Fuck that shithole

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@penzman they mainly wear civilian clothing during active combat. I don’t think that was an active combat zone

2 +1 Educating_Troglodytes 4 months ago

@penzman



Child killed in the Qana massacre, in an air strike carried out by the Israeli Air Force (IAF) on a three-story building, during the 2006 Lebanon War. 28 civilians were killed, of which 16 were children.
Israeli massacres, many including child victims, span 70 years – thousands of Palestinian lives snuffed out in the pursuit of a Jewish State.
by Philip Weiss, reposted from Mondoweiss, April 2018
It would be nice to think that, as an Israeli officer once put it, “This time we went too far” — that the killings of 17 unarmed protesters in Gaza by Israeli riflers across a security fence on Friday would cause the world to sanction Israel for its conduct. But if you look over Israel’s history, you find that the massacre has been a ready tool in the Israeli war-chest; and Israelis have not been prosecuted for carrying them out. Indeed, a couple of those responsible later became prime minister!
Here, largely from my own memory, is a rapidly-assembled list of massacres, defined by Webster’s as the killing of a “number of usually helpless or unresisting human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty” (and yes, a couple precede the birth of the state).
1946. Zionist militias blow up the south wing of the King David Hotel, killing 91 people, most of them civilians, in order to protest British rule of Palestine.
1948. Zionist militias kill over 100 civilians in the village of Deir Yassin, which is on the road to Jerusalem. The action helps clear the road for the military advance on Jerusalem and scares thousands of other Palestinians who flee their villages. The name Deir Yassin becomes a rallying cry for Palestinians for decades to come though no one is punished. An officer with responsibility for the massacre, Menachem Begin, became Israeli prime minister 29 years later.
1948. During the expulsion of Palestinians from the central Israeli city of Lydda, more than 100 men are rounded up and held in a mosque and later massacred (according to Reja-e Busailah’s new book and others). The episode terrifies thousands of other Palestinians who seek refuge in the West Bank.
1948. Hundreds of Palestinian civilians are killed by Israeli forces in Al Dawayima village, west of Hebron. Many are killed in barbarous manner; the crime is swept under the rug for decades.
1953. Israeli troops led by Ariel Sharon raid the village of Qibya in the Jordanian-occupied West Bank and kill 69 people, most of them women and children, in retaliation for a cross-border raid that killed three Israelis. (The massacre is memorialized in Nathan Englander’s latest novel as one that solidifies Sharon’s reputation as an officer who will exact swift and awful revenge on those who harm Jews, thereby assuring his rise.)
1956. Israeli forces gun down farmers in Kfar Qasim returning from the fields who are unaware that the village had been placed under a strict curfew by the Israeli government earlier that day. Forty-eight Palestinian citizens of Israel are killed, many women and children.
1956. Israeli forces kill 275 Palestinians in Gaza in the midst of the Suez Crisis. The massacre is documented by Joe Sacco in Footnotes in Gaza.
1967. Israeli forces are said to have killed scores of Egyptian army prisoners in the Sinai during the 1967 War. Some say 100s.
1970. Israel killed 46 Egyptian children and wounded 50 others during an air raid on a primary school in the village of Bahr el-Baqar, Egypt. Known as the Bahr el-Baqar Massacre, the assault completely destroyed the school and was part of the Priha (Blossoms) Operations during the War of Attrition.
1982. The Sabra and Shatilla massacres of Palestinians in Beirut refugee camps are carried out by Lebanese Phalangist militias. But the Israel Defense Forces had control of the area and Ariel Sharon allows the militias to go into the camps. Somewhere between several hundred and 3000 Palestinians are murdered. Sharon, who died in 2014, escaped punishment for war crimes; in fact, he became an Israeli prime minister.
1996. The first Qana massacre takes place when Israeli missiles strike a UN compound in southern Lebanon where many civilians have gathered seeking refuge during clashes between Israel and Hezbollah. Over 100 civilians are killed. “Israel was universally condemned, and the United States intervened to extricate its ally from the quagmire,” Avi Shlaim writes in The Iron Wall.
2006. The second Qana massacre takes place during the Lebanon war when Israeli missiles strike a building in a village outside Qana, killing 36 civilians, including 16 children. The strike is initially defended as a response to the firing of Katyusha rockets at Israel from civilian areas.
2008-2009. During Cast Lead, the Israeli assault on Gaza following exchanges of rocket/missile attacks in months before, more than 1400 Palestinians are killed over 22 days, most of them civilians. Many die as at Qana, when they flee their homes to UN compounds and schools, hoping to be safe. The massacre brings international condemnation, including by the Goldstone Report to the UN Human Rights Council alleging war crimes; but the United States does its utmost under President Obama to defend Israel from all charges, and no one is brought to the bar.
2012.  During eight days of “Pillar of Clouds,” Israel kills 160 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians. The offensive boosts Netanyahu in the polls and seems timed to torpedo Palestine’s historic UN bid for statehood.
2014. Another Israeli onslaught on Gaza, this one lasting 51 days, kills upwards of 2200 Palestinians, most of them civilians. The massacre is famous for sniper killings of unarmed people and for the killings of entire families, 89 according to some authorities, typically wiped out in their homes by a missile strike. In one instance, 20 members of one family are killed. The international condemnation is again toothless.

Philip Weiss is Founder and Co-Editor of Mondoweiss.net.

RELATED READING:
25 years after an Israeli massacred 29 Palestinians, victims are still being punished
Palestinian Refugees Right to Return and Repatriation
Israeli historian thinks 1956 massacre was part of a secret plan to expel Palestinians
Killing Mosquitoes: The Gaza Massacres, Pro-Israel Media Bias, & the Weapon Of ‘Antisemitism’
Today marks the 69th anniversary of the Deir Yassin massacre
You don't need to the brave Jews are hero's when killing civilians, here a short 70 year re collection of Jewish Massacres...

10 +1 SomeJoo 4 months ago

These are hamass tactics.

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@SomeJoo yes, Hamas does wear civilian clothing sometimes. HOWEVER! Let it be noted that they wear civilian clothing during ACTIVE COMBAT. I’m not sure that was a combat zone.

5 +1 SomeJoo 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 Yeah, but they'll also happily blow themselves up next to highly explosive cargos (for effect, but this seems to have been a flop). - People seem to forget that, in the end, ham-ass and their collaborators are nothing but islamic fundamentalists who do these things worldwide and that our army is a professional, modern and a well equipped one (G'd-like compared to whatever they consider themselves to be) and that we don't really have to stoop down to blowing up random civilians to make statements and feed a propaganda machine. - THEY're the "guerilla" who depend on such things.

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@SomeJoo *sniff* *sniff* BRO I THOUGHT I TOLD YOU TO SPRAY SOME FUCKING PERFUME ON YOUR BEARD IT SMELLS LIKE DOOOOK

2 +1 Educating_Troglodytes 4 months ago

@SomeJoo
And they learned from the best...


Child killed in the Qana massacre, in an air strike carried out by the Israeli Air Force (IAF) on a three-story building, during the 2006 Lebanon War. 28 civilians were killed, of which 16 were children.
Israeli massacres, many including child victims, span 70 years – thousands of Palestinian lives snuffed out in the pursuit of a Jewish State.
by Philip Weiss, reposted from Mondoweiss, April 2018
It would be nice to think that, as an Israeli officer once put it, “This time we went too far” — that the killings of 17 unarmed protesters in Gaza by Israeli riflers across a security fence on Friday would cause the world to sanction Israel for its conduct. But if you look over Israel’s history, you find that the massacre has been a ready tool in the Israeli war-chest; and Israelis have not been prosecuted for carrying them out. Indeed, a couple of those responsible later became prime minister!
Here, largely from my own memory, is a rapidly-assembled list of massacres, defined by Webster’s as the killing of a “number of usually helpless or unresisting human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty” (and yes, a couple precede the birth of the state).
1946. Zionist militias blow up the south wing of the King David Hotel, killing 91 people, most of them civilians, in order to protest British rule of Palestine.
1948. Zionist militias kill over 100 civilians in the village of Deir Yassin, which is on the road to Jerusalem. The action helps clear the road for the military advance on Jerusalem and scares thousands of other Palestinians who flee their villages. The name Deir Yassin becomes a rallying cry for Palestinians for decades to come though no one is punished. An officer with responsibility for the massacre, Menachem Begin, became Israeli prime minister 29 years later.
1948. During the expulsion of Palestinians from the central Israeli city of Lydda, more than 100 men are rounded up and held in a mosque and later massacred (according to Reja-e Busailah’s new book and others). The episode terrifies thousands of other Palestinians who seek refuge in the West Bank.
1948. Hundreds of Palestinian civilians are killed by Israeli forces in Al Dawayima village, west of Hebron. Many are killed in barbarous manner; the crime is swept under the rug for decades.
1953. Israeli troops led by Ariel Sharon raid the village of Qibya in the Jordanian-occupied West Bank and kill 69 people, most of them women and children, in retaliation for a cross-border raid that killed three Israelis. (The massacre is memorialized in Nathan Englander’s latest novel as one that solidifies Sharon’s reputation as an officer who will exact swift and awful revenge on those who harm Jews, thereby assuring his rise.)
1956. Israeli forces gun down farmers in Kfar Qasim returning from the fields who are unaware that the village had been placed under a strict curfew by the Israeli government earlier that day. Forty-eight Palestinian citizens of Israel are killed, many women and children.
1956. Israeli forces kill 275 Palestinians in Gaza in the midst of the Suez Crisis. The massacre is documented by Joe Sacco in Footnotes in Gaza.
1967. Israeli forces are said to have killed scores of Egyptian army prisoners in the Sinai during the 1967 War. Some say 100s.
1970. Israel killed 46 Egyptian children and wounded 50 others during an air raid on a primary school in the village of Bahr el-Baqar, Egypt. Known as the Bahr el-Baqar Massacre, the assault completely destroyed the school and was part of the Priha (Blossoms) Operations during the War of Attrition.
1982. The Sabra and Shatilla massacres of Palestinians in Beirut refugee camps are carried out by Lebanese Phalangist militias. But the Israel Defense Forces had control of the area and Ariel Sharon allows the militias to go into the camps. Somewhere between several hundred and 3000 Palestinians are murdered. Sharon, who died in 2014, escaped punishment for war crimes; in fact, he became an Israeli prime minister.
1996. The first Qana massacre takes place when Israeli missiles strike a UN compound in southern Lebanon where many civilians have gathered seeking refuge during clashes between Israel and Hezbollah. Over 100 civilians are killed. “Israel was universally condemned, and the United States intervened to extricate its ally from the quagmire,” Avi Shlaim writes in The Iron Wall.
2006. The second Qana massacre takes place during the Lebanon war when Israeli missiles strike a building in a village outside Qana, killing 36 civilians, including 16 children. The strike is initially defended as a response to the firing of Katyusha rockets at Israel from civilian areas.
2008-2009. During Cast Lead, the Israeli assault on Gaza following exchanges of rocket/missile attacks in months before, more than 1400 Palestinians are killed over 22 days, most of them civilians. Many die as at Qana, when they flee their homes to UN compounds and schools, hoping to be safe. The massacre brings international condemnation, including by the Goldstone Report to the UN Human Rights Council alleging war crimes; but the United States does its utmost under President Obama to defend Israel from all charges, and no one is brought to the bar.
2012.  During eight days of “Pillar of Clouds,” Israel kills 160 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians. The offensive boosts Netanyahu in the polls and seems timed to torpedo Palestine’s historic UN bid for statehood.
2014. Another Israeli onslaught on Gaza, this one lasting 51 days, kills upwards of 2200 Palestinians, most of them civilians. The massacre is famous for sniper killings of unarmed people and for the killings of entire families, 89 according to some authorities, typically wiped out in their homes by a missile strike. In one instance, 20 members of one family are killed. The international condemnation is again toothless.

Philip Weiss is Founder and Co-Editor of Mondoweiss.net.

RELATED READING:
25 years after an Israeli massacred 29 Palestinians, victims are still being punished
Palestinian Refugees Right to Return and Repatriation
Israeli historian thinks 1956 massacre was part of a secret plan to expel Palestinians
Killing Mosquitoes: The Gaza Massacres, Pro-Israel Media Bias, & the Weapon Of ‘Antisemitism’
Today marks the 69th anniversary of the Deir Yassin massacre

13 +1 Badboy 4 months ago

Fuck shit hole Palestine

4 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Badboy Palestine isn’t the reason the hooker’s telling you to cum already because it’s been 4 hours and her hand’s tired.

11 +1 Lilith 4 months ago

Cease Fire looks like it's working pretty good :angel:

3 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@Lilith indeed, but do note that the first two ceasefires seem to have been by Israel

November 2023 Ceasefire:
November 24th: AP reported that two Palestinians were fatally shot and eleven were wounded by Israeli soldiers as they attempted to move back to northern Gaza.
November 26 (2 days after first ceasefire put in place): Al Jazeera reported that six Palestinians were killed in Israeli operations in the West Bank.

Second ceasefire (January-March 2025):
January 20th (day of ceasefire): Al Jazeera said that a 14-year-old boy died after being shot on his chest during an IDF raid in Sebastia.
January 21st (1 day after ceasefire): The Gaza Health Ministry reported that at least 60 Palestinians were killed in Israeli attacks in the past 24 hours, increasing its count of the Palestinian death toll in Gaza to 47,035.

October 2025 ceasefire:
October 13th (3 days since ceasefire): Hamas killed at least 33 people in Gaza City as part of the ongoing crackdown against opposing clans inside Gaza, many of which "are understood to be"[by whom?] backed and armed by Israel.[39][40][41] Videos of the executions were posted by Hamas affiliated channels. It is disputed whether Hamas followed due judicial process for sentencing.[42] It was condemned by Palestinian human rights monitors, such as Al Mezan. Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas condemned the killings as "heinous crimes and field executions".

2 +1 BigHeartSmallWorld 4 months ago

@SugarSlaughter293 also note that the March ceasefire ended bc Israel launched an indiscriminate surprise attack on the Gaza Strip https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/March_2025_Israeli_attacks_on_the_Gaza_Strip